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To: Kartographer

Haiti? I didn’t know that area was particularly active.


3 posted on 01/12/2010 2:30:31 PM PST by VeniVidiVici (Gasoline is up 100% since the election of Barack Hussein Obama. Thanks, Democrats!)
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To: VeniVidiVici
Haiti? I didn’t know that area was particularly active.

Remember that the Greater Antilles and Lesser Antilles are a big arc of islands. In the Lesser Antilles there is string of volcanoes. When I was in the Dominican Republic there was an earthquake. Haiti is on the west side of Hispaniola. Hispaniola is on the edge of an active plate boundary zone between the North American plate and the northeast corner of the Caribbean plate. It's a geological happening place.
37 posted on 01/12/2010 3:12:14 PM PST by aruanan
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To: VeniVidiVici
Here's more about that region, centering on the risk to Puerto Rico (less than 100 miles away from Hispaniola):
The region has high seismicity and large earthquakes (figure 2). Examples include a magnitude 7.5 earthquake centered northwest of Puerto Rico in 1943, and magnitude 8.1 and 6.9 earthquakes north of Hispaniola in 1946 and 1953, respectively. Historically, other large earthquakes have also struck the area, such as one in 1787 (magnitude~8.1), possibly in the Puerto Rico Trench, and one in 1867 (magnitude~7.5) in the Anegada Trough (figure 1). A draft U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) hazard map places equal probability for damaging ground motion for Mayaguez in western Puerto Rico as for Seattle, Washington. Other Puerto Rican cities also have substantial risk.The hazard from tsunamis is also apparent. Immediately after the 1946 earthquake, a tsunami struck northeastern Hispaniola and moved inland for several kilometers. Some reports indicate that nearly 1,800 people drowned. A 1918 magnitude 7.5 earthquake resulted in a tsunami that killed at least 91 people in northwestern Puerto Rico (figure 4). Eyewitness reports of an 1867 Virgin Islands tsunami gave a maximum wave height of >7 m in Frederiksted, St. Croix, where a large naval vessel was left on top of a pier. Essentially, all of the known causes of tsunamis are present in the Caribbean -- earthquakes, submarine landslides, submarine volcanic eruptions, subaerial pyroclastic flows into the ocean, and major tsunamis called teletsunamis. Because of its high population density and extensive development near the coast, Puerto Rico has a significant risk for earthquakes and tsunamis.

39 posted on 01/12/2010 3:15:41 PM PST by aruanan
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